M. Draper, Zen and the art of garden province maintenance: the soft intimacy of hard men in the wilderness of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, 1952-1997, J S AFR ST, 24(4), 1998, pp. 801-828
Within the short space of a few decades, the South African white male's rol
e as a game ranger and conservationist rose to glory and fell from grace. T
he disgrace roughly coincided with the demise of apartheid as the ideologic
al basis of racial hierarchies became more widely recognised. The illegitim
acy of the white conservationist's colonial role as the gamekeeper and cust
odian who forcibly withheld natural resources from African people became ap
parent. This knocked the calling and mission of the game ranger off the mor
al high ground, and forced it dawn to the grassroots to consider more egali
tarian participatory approaches. While the racial and class connotations of
colonial conservation have been well recognised, such analyses have rested
on the presentation of the game ranger as an insensitive khaki-clad macho
man on a militarised mission, possibly driven by romantic ideals. In such d
epictions, the losers of this war over resources are rural African people -
especially women who are generally seen as closer to the earth in the stru
ggle for livelihood This essay does not seek to challenge such a reading of
history, but maintains that the story is not that simple. White men did no
t make this history themselves. Both the racial and gendered aspects of nat
ure conservation need to be seen in a multi-dimensional frame that accommod
ates the insouciant agency of people, as well as nature. This it does by fo
cusing on South African wilderness politics in the province of KwaZulu-Nata
l. It also shows the links with the global situation and situates such an a
nalysis in terms of the debates about changing masculinities where the fron
tier experience has been fundamental. In another settler society (Australia
) the environmental movement which identifies with wilderness in particular
, has been shown to be an important home for men seeking to shrug off their
hegemonic power and attempting to move against the ingrained habits of the
ir race and class identities. In the maverick lives of lan Player and Nick
Steele, the two white men principally examined here, identification with wi
ld nature and indigenous Africans did involve some quite radical reorientat
ion away from the milieu of the white ruling class. They anticipated and in
fluenced trends that came to the global environmental movement relatively r
ecently. Player and Steele were, however, caught up in circumstances that m
ade for some curious local twists in their adventures on a 'frontier' where
the laws of nature became confused with social ideals.